The Codfish Dream
Chronicles of a West Coast Fishing Guide
ISBN 9781772032420 (pbk)
ISBN 9781772032437 (ebook)
After spending fifteen years as a fishing guide on the BC coast, David Giblin decided that the offbeat people and places he’d encountered during that colourful period in his life had to be preserved. Like any good fishing story, wherein the fish seem to grow faster after they are dead, the forty-seven interconnected narratives in what eventually became The Codfish Dream took on a life of their own. The result is a series of hilarious, strange, keenly observed, true (or mostly true) stories of Giblin’s experiences. These whimisical tales are held together by a thread of international intrigue that affects everyone in the small community of Stuart Island over one eventful summer, when FBI agents visit the island to investigate insider trading. The Codfish Dream is an unforgettable book imbued with an undeniable sense of place and time.
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Praise for Gilly the Ghillie
“A delightful and entertaining tale that captures our (often eccentric) West Coast island communities, complete with gum boots, pot plants, fish gutting, wood stoves, and salty, blustery storms. Makes me want to get a fishing guide and go fishing!”
“A winningly entertaining set of linked stories concerning the lives of fishing guides and their clients along the upper BC coast. The foibles of characters such as Baba, Troutbreath, and the eponymous Gilly, along with the author’s understated dry humour, beg the question—what will they get up to next?”
“You invite a handful of Very Important Writers to a large formal dinner to hear their stories. For some reason, a fishing guide is at the table, too. By dinner’s end, everyone is rolling around laughing at the guide’s stories. Ladies and gents, meet David Giblin, storyteller of Stuart Island...”
“The lives of fishing guides on Stuart Island are every bit as complex, quirky, and turbulent as the tidal rapids and whirlpools they negotiate daily in search of enormous salmon. David Giblin’s engaging, often funny, tales effectively portray life on BC’s wild waters and remote islands.”
Praise for The Codfish Dream
“You’ll meet eccentric shore workers, wealthy guests who arrive by yacht and floatplane, as well as essential guides Big Jake, Lucky Petersen, Vop and Wet Lenny... A deadpan narrative keeps the absurdity coming as earnest RCMP, FBI, and Fisheries officers encounter the salmon-obsessed denizens of the island resort. This book is a keeper.”
“The Codfish Dream is a lively read with many layers. Those who fish will no doubt identify with the chronicles of the fish and those who pursue them.”
“David Giblin is a marvellous storyteller, and The Codfish Dream is a wonderful book: witty, whimsical, well-written, and a terrific read from cover to cover.”
“As skillful a writer as he was a sports-fishing guide, David Giblin deftly hooks, reels, and lands us in the watery world of Canada’s wild west coast of the 1980s. Each cleverly crafted story offers a porthole view into a rollicking season of unforgettable characters, capturing a time and place changed forever. With insights and humour as finely honed as a dressing knife, we walk a mile in his gumboots in the hunt for the mighty tyee salmon.”
Gilly the Ghillie
More Chronicles of a West Coast Fishing Guide
Copyright © 2020 David Giblin
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, audio recording, or otherwise—without the written permission of the publisher or a licence from Access Copyright, Toronto, Canada.
Heritage House Publishing Company Ltd.
heritagehouse.ca
Cataloguing information available from Library and Archives Canada
978-1-77203-335-9 (pbk)
978-1-77203-336-6 (ebook)
Edited by Lenore Hietkamp
Proofread by Nandini Thaker
Cover and interior design by Jacqui Thomas
Cover image by David Giblin
Ebook by Alexandra Santos
Dictionary definition on p. xi is adapted from Dictionary, Mac G4 ed., v. 2.0.3 (51.5). Apple Inc., 2005–2007.
Excerpt from Vancouver’s log on p. 175 is from The Voyage of George Vancouver, 1791–1795: Volumes I–IV, edited by W. Kaye Lamb (London: Hakluyt Society, 1984)
Heritage House gratefully acknowledges that the land on which we live and work is within the traditional territories of the Lkwungen (Esquimalt and Songhees), Malahat, Pacheedaht, Scia’new, T’Sou-ke, and WSÁNEĆ (Pauquachin, Tsartlip, Tsawout, Tseycum) Peoples.
We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund (CBF) and the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Province of British Columbia through the British Columbia Arts Council and the Book Publishing Tax Credit.
For Blake
Ghillie
noun
variant spelling of gillie.
|'gilē| |'gili|
1. (in Scotland) a man or boy who attends someone on a hunting or fishing expedition.
• historical: a Highland chief’s attendant.
2. (usu. ghillie) a type of shoe with laces along the instep and no tongue, esp. those used for Scottish country dancing.
ORIGIN Late 16th century, from Scottish Gaelic gille, “lad, servant.” The word was also found in the term gilliewetfoot, denoting a servant who carried the chief over a stream, used as a contemptuous name by Lowlanders for the follower of a Highland chief.
Sense 2 dates from the 1930s.
All night the storm had been building. Nelson was roused from a deep sleep several times by strange sounds. When a grey dawn finally broke, ragged black clouds scudded past and small branches were already being stripped from the trees. A cruel wind swept the rain and sleet before it. The sound of the rain pelting the picture window filled the living room.
It was that kind of morning. Why get out of a warm and dry bed when the wind was blowing a gale? The guests weren’t due to arrive for another couple of weeks, and all the preparations were well in hand. Just roll over and go back to sleep. Of course, Nelson found that impossible to do.
He lay in bed and listened to the sounds of the storm, sorting through them to try to figure out what had woken him. Most were familiar—rain on the windows and skylights, the cracking of branches giving way in the wind; all pretty standard. From farther away came the usual creaking of the docks below as they rose and fell and rubbed against the pilings.
The docks were empty, and no large yachts were straining at their lines, in danger of breaking loose. A great deal of work had been done over the the winter to build up the existing docks. A new finger float had been added for a couple of returning big yachts—almost overbuilt, Nelson mused. The metal walkway that led down to the docks squeaked, and he made a mental note to add more grease to its roller. None of these noises would have been enough to wake him.
Still, there must be something going on. He finally forced himself out of the warm bed to have a look. He walked sleepily out of the manager’s bedroom at the back of the main lodge into the guest lounge and stopped in front of the large picture window overlooking the front deck, the docks below, and the rest of the resort property.
Nelson yawned and stretched, adjusting his flannel pajamas. Things looked pretty secure and tidy. He felt pleased with himself.
He had almost forgotten about the new satellite TV. A satellite dish—the largest one Herbert could find, over ten feet in diameter—sat on the deck. Herbert and a couple of people had arrived on Herbert’s yacht two days ago with the whole system. They hauled up the TV that now had pride of place in the lounge. All the supporting technology was arranged on the shelves under the picture window. There had been much fiddling to point the dish to the correct azimuth, a word Herbert liked to hear himself saying. Getting the angles right had consumed most of their time.
If Herbert hadn’t carried on about it, Nelson might have turned away from the window and headed back to bed. But he peered through the rain, then folded his arms and frowned. The angle of the dish wasn’t right.
As the wind gusted again, something terrible happened. Like a hooded raptor, the dish turned slightly, facing Nelson. Then the wind blew full on and sent it skidding across the deck toward him. Toward him and the precious plate-glass window, which was the only thing that stood between Nelson and the giant satellite dish. Nelson jumped back instinctively. As the dish hurtled toward him, it made the sound that had disturbed his sleep.
He had an ice-cold realization. The metal monster had spent the early-morning hours roaming around because Herbert and the others had neglected to secure it to the deck. Nelson had watched them drill the holes for the lag bolts, heavy, five-inch-long metal pegs that would keep the dish in place. It was the last thing to do after they had gotten the dish where they wanted it. Obviously, they never finished the job.
That precious window also protected the massive new television—a full thirty-two-inch screen—and all the electronics to make it run, as well as the latest audio gear for playing music. If the dish smashed the window, the rain currently pelting the world outside would ruin the entire expensive system.
To the left of the window, in the hallway leading to the hot tub just outside the door, hung a bright yellow bathrobe above a pair of gumboots. Nelson pulled on the boots and grabbed the robe, with its red monogram, “IV.” Vop had been over to use the hot tub the night before, and he’d left his robe behind. Nelson stepped out the door.
The gusting wind had brought the dish close to the edge of the deck. He used the thin cotton belt of the bathrobe to tie it to the railing, hoping it would hold while he went to the generator shed for the tools and equipment to fix this mess.
Nelson hunched into the wind, clutching the bright yellow, monogrammed bathrobe closed with both hands. The wind found all the places to push aside his loose flannel pajamas and drive the cold rain into his skin. He made slow headway uphill, toward the tool shed and against the windstorm. The gumboots he had grabbed in his hurry were a couple sizes too big, and his feet slipped around inside them.
He muttered as he struggled, and the wind picked up and scattered his words. “‘Installation experts,’ my ass. Just a couple of his useless drinking buddies he didn’t want his wife to know about. That poor woman, not a goddamned jury in the land would convict either of us, no matter how bloody we left his corpse.”
He pulled the collar of Vop’s bathrobe even tighter to his chin. The gumboots slapped painfully against his soaked, pajama-clad legs. He had to fight for every step up the plank walkway. The wind grew stronger as he pushed through the gusts, and he was now being pelted with debris ripped from the trees, along with the driving rain. He knew what the increasing strength of the wind was doing on the deck, and settled into his struggle with a grim determination.
Finally arriving at the tool shed, Nelson threw open the door and started sorting through several buckets he had used to organize his last job. He found the one he wanted and upended it. Heavy lag bolts left over from building the new docks clattered onto the floor. Nelson scooped up four or five before they stopped rolling and tossed them back into the bucket. He threw in a heavy hammer and a socket wrench that fit the bolts, and then pulled a coil of rope over his shoulder. He paused for a moment to make sure he had everything he needed.
Satisfied, he turned and left the shed, one hand lugging the bucket and the other clutching the collar of the bathrobe. He hugged the bucket to his chest for whatever comfort it could provide. At least the wind was at his back, for now. As he staggered back to the resort, Nelson sounded like a small herd of Swiss milk cows as the contents of his bucket clanged around inside it.
The walkway led into the shelter of the rocky bank just above the front deck of the resort, where the satellite dish waited. The wind backed off a little, a dramatic pause that allowed Nelson to stop for a moment and catch his breath.
So far, the narrow cotton belt was holding, although the material was obviously stretched to the breaking point. Nelson knew it needed just one more burst of wind for it to give in completely. As he left the shelter of the rocks and stepped out onto the deck, the full force of rain and wind threw its arms around him like an old friend. The dish sensed him approaching and heaved and bucked against the thin yellow restraint. Nelson was almost there, rope in hand, when that tortured bit of cotton finally let go. Suddenly free, the dish leapt toward him. Nelson was between it and the plate-glass window, and stepping out of the way was not an option. With the rope over his shoulder and the bucket still in his hands, he jumped onto the thing.
The dish skittered toward the window. Nelson heard someone screaming, but the wind ripped the sound away. He held on, but had to drop the bucket. Its contents rolled onto the deck. His weight hardly slowed the dish. Together, they charged across the deck right at the plate glass. Not so much a rider as a reluctant passenger, Nelson was carried along helplessly on the back of this metal beast.
He remembered something he had read recently in an issue of the National Geographic. Herbert left them scattered around the lounge; he thought they gave the place a touch of the outdoor intellectual. A paleoanthropologist in one article wrote about trying to understand the pattern of bone injuries suffered by the Neanderthals. Scientists thought it might be related to their hunting practices but wanted to confirm it somehow. They first looked at modern-day occupations that they thought might be similar to the activities of those hunters, like rodeo riders. It wasn’t until they looked at the lowly rodeo clown who protected the riders that they found a pattern of injuries that bore a striking resemblance to those of the Neanderthal hunters. The hunters and the clowns both were trying to survive, and maybe help out their fellow man at the same time. They had to stand on the ground while large, angry animals charged at them. They were kicked, stomped, run over, gored, and thrown into the air, and sometimes the only thing to do was to grab hold of the thing charging them and hold on. All of which left a tale of broken bones.
With a winter’s worth of beard and wearing his ridiculous yellow and red outfit, Nelson thought he must have looked a bit of both clown and Neanderthal. He smiled grimly as he closed his eyes and waited for the pain to start.
Nothing happened. Nelson felt a gentle deceleration and then everything just came to a stop. Carefully, slowly, as if even the mere movement of his eyelids would fling him into a jagged glass chasm, Nelson opened his eyes. His insane Neanderthal clown reflection stared at him from the plate glass, mere inches away. The wind had died.
Reprieved for the moment, Nelson knew it could return, even stronger. He slid down and began wrestling with the inanimate dish again. It had taken Herby and two other men to put the dish in place yesterday. Nelson felt very alone out on the front deck of the resort today.
The dish, which only moments ago had skittered across the deck trying to attack him, now resisted doing anything at all. It had returned to its immovable metal state. He couldn’t push or pull it. However, he found he could rock the dish by using as leverage the arms and crosspieces he had been clinging to moments before. He worked it slowly back, an inch at a time, to its original position. He could see the waiting holes in the deck, but then something else caught his eye.
Out on the water was a lone guide boat, moving through the storm on a straight course for the resort. Sometimes it disappeared, hidden by the blowing spray. Its slow but relentless progress distracted Nelson. He couldn’t believe anyone could be out on the water on such a wretched morning. Some urgent mission must be driving them into the bite of wind and spray.
The dish saw its opportunity. It seemed to raise its head and turn. Nelson caught the movement out of the corner of his eye and stepped to one side. The dish followed. Nelson stopped to see what it would do next. The dish stopped. Nelson took a step toward it. He still hoped he could tie it off on the rail, and the dish had just moved closer to it. Then the wind gusted from a different direction. The dish stepped into the centre of the deck. It was mocking Nelson. It turned slightly in the wind with almost a come-hither look.
Nelson moved toward it. The dish moved away again, back toward the railing. Another gust of wind, stronger than any so far that morning, caught the dish and it flew along the railing toward the window once more. It was trying to do an end run around Nelson. Nelson threw himself onto its back again. The wind hurled them toward the window. From somewhere, Nelson heard someone screaming again. He would have to look into that, but right now he was far too busy.
In the days of sail-powered warships with muzzle-loaded cannons, sometimes, in a heavy sea, a ship’s gun might break loose. It could maim and kill sailors and even punch holes in the hull of a ship and sink it. To slow a gun’s movement across the gun deck, the crew would throw down ropes, hammocks, timbers, and blocks—anything to save the ship from such a terror. Mostly, such attempts at impediments were simply mashed into a pulp, but today, Nelson got lucky. As the dish was being pushed along the railing, it ran up on one of the lag bolts from the bucket Nelson had dropped onto the deck, which had gotten stuck in a gap between the deck boards. The thrust of the dish forced the bolt deeper into the wood.
His tormentor’s sudden stop threw Nelson onto the deck. He sprang back up as fast as the gumboots would let him. He was happy to find the coil of rope was still around his shoulder and quickly tied off the dish onto the railing. He made sure it couldn’t move again.
Nelson turned his attention back to the boat making its way through the storm. In just a few minutes it would be tying up at his dock. Nelson had to wonder who this person was. It couldn’t be any of his guides. All of them were a little crazy, but none would ever think of being out on the water today.
At the bottom of the walkway that connected the front deck to the docks was the boathouse. Nelson stepped in to grab a towel. He came back outside with it around his neck, a bright striped thing that must have been left by some yachters. It kept his neck warm and stopped the cold water from trickling down the collar of the yellow bathrobe. If he looked ridiculous, he didn’t care.
The boat approaching was very much like any of the ones used by the guides. It had two chairs for guests amidships and a seat in the stern within comfortable reach of the long tiller arm connected to the outboard engine. Nelson watched as the skipper deftly steered while working with the gusting wind to manoeuvre the boat onto the moorage. The skipper waited patiently for just the right moment, then threw the motor into reverse and stopped the boat as it kissed up against the wood.
The skipper leapt out of the stern seat, moving quickly to the side of the boat. They reached down to pull out a short tie-up rope that ended in a carabiner, a strong metal clip used by climbers. They waited, judging the heaving of the boat as the waves pushed it into the docks. As the boat rose and the gunnel came past the tie-up rail, the skipper flicked the rope through the gap between the rail and the dock and clipped it onto itself. The boat continued to rise past the rail and the skipper stepped off. Tying up the boat and getting out of it was all accomplished in one smooth motion.
Whoever this was, they had obviously spent some time on the water. Nelson had never seen a carabiner used on a tie-up rope. He ruled out most of the regular guides in the area, mainly on account of the weather. And now he noticed something else that removed the other guides as choices. This skipper was decidedly female. Even under the bulky survival suit, it was unmistakable.
Then she turned and looked at Nelson. She had eyes like a Cooper’s hawk.
For Nelson it was like being hit in the chest. He let out an “oof” and immediately hoped she hadn’t heard it. It sounded like he had just called her an egg if he was speaking French. Nelson could only stand there. He became strangely self-conscious. He suddenly began to care what he looked like. His outfit was ridiculous. He knew he had to say something, anything.
“Kind of a windy day to be out on the water.” Even to himself he sounded like someone’s father.
“Yeah, the air is really fresh though, eh? Makes you feel like spring is almost here.”
Spring? This makes her think of spring? Nelson was a little dumbfounded. He stood there gaping like a fish. There was an awkward pause you could drive a barge through.
The visitor finally spoke up.
“Hey,” she said, extending her hand. “My name is Gillian, but most people just call me Gilly. Are you Nelson?”
The question made Nelson remember Vop’s robe had the initials “IV” prominently sown onto the left breast.
“Um, yeah, I’m Nelson, though I guess you must be wondering about the initials.”
Nelson self-consciously touched the embroidery. He realized she wasn’t even looking at it and probably hadn’t even noticed. “The robe, it belongs to one of the other guides.” He felt compelled to continue explaining himself. “We were having a hot tub party the other night—well, it wasn’t just him and me, I mean, there were some other people here as well, and you know, stuff, uh, stuff gets left behind.”
Nelson could feel himself reddening. His ears grew alarmingly warm.
The woman simply stood there quietly, a slight smile on her face. He was blurting out the answers to questions that she hadn’t even asked.
Gilly spoke up again before the pause got too awkward. “Oh, no, no. I understand. I’ve heard about some of the guide parties up here. No need to explain.”
“Say,” Nelson said, seeing an opening. “I’m dealing with a little situation up on the front deck. Do you think you could give me a hand for a few minutes?”
With two people, and the cooperation of the wind, getting the satellite dish back to its original position and pointed in the right direction was quickly accomplished. Nelson made sure the lag bolts were actually inserted in the holes this time and then tightened down. They were finished and back inside the resort before it began to rain and blow again.
“Wow, that’s a huge TV!”
“It’s thirty-two inches from corner to corner. Herbert, the owner, had to get the biggest one he could find,” said Nelson. He sounded a little envious. Not of the television, perhaps, but of the ability to just go out and buy this whole setup.
The TV took up space in the room like an important piece of the furniture. At the moment, though, it was no more than an awkward coffee table.
“So the guy who owns this place just dumped all this here for you to sort out?” Gilly asked, sounding incredulous. It did seem a bit haphazard.
“I wish it was even that organized,” said Nelson. “If he had just left it for me, at least I would know where we were. He and his buddies left here thinking they had actually set up a satellite TV system. I have no idea what they did—or what they didn’t do.”
“Wishful thinkers?”
“Just so you know who we’re dealing with, see that, um, trophy over there on the shelf?”
Nelson pointed to an odd pile of airplane parts—a broken piston, a piece of throttle control, and a couple of cracked spark plugs—spray-painted gold and mounted on a black wooden base.